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The phrase "a batch of" can be followed by countable and uncountable nouns
but why in Word it must be followed by singular verb even through the subject is plural? Can anyone help me in explaining this? By grammar of Subject and Verb Agreement and Principle of Proximity: A batch of letters are ready. (Should be correct) The reason is that the subject "A batch of letters" actually is plural and should be followed by a verb in plural form. I have also tried a number of and a group of and they are OK. A number of STBs are ready. (Correct in Word) A group of STBs are ready. (Correct in Word) I have checked in dictionary and grammar book: http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/batch http://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/batch Dictionary: 1 : the quantity baked at one time : baking 2 a : the quantity of material prepared or required for one operation; specifically : a mixture of raw materials ready for fusion into glass b : the quantity produced at one operation c : a group of jobs (as programs) that are submitted for processing on a computer and whose results are obtained at a later time batch processing compare time-sharing 3 : a quantity (as of persons or things) considered as a group Thesaurus: Meaning: 1 a number of things considered as a unit a batch of essays to correct see group 1 2 a usually small number of persons considered as a unit send in the next batch of applicants see group 2 Subject and Verb Agreement Basic Rule. The basic rule states that a singular subject takes a singular verb, while a plural subject takes a plural verb. http://www.grammarbook.com/grammar/subjectVerbAgree.asp |
#2
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When you know more than the grammar checker, you should just ignore it. Or
don't use it at all. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "Ashley" wrote in message ... The phrase "a batch of" can be followed by countable and uncountable nouns but why in Word it must be followed by singular verb even through the subject is plural? Can anyone help me in explaining this? By grammar of Subject and Verb Agreement and Principle of Proximity: A batch of letters are ready. (Should be correct) The reason is that the subject "A batch of letters" actually is plural and should be followed by a verb in plural form. I have also tried a number of and a group of and they are OK. A number of STBs are ready. (Correct in Word) A group of STBs are ready. (Correct in Word) I have checked in dictionary and grammar book: http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/batch http://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/batch Dictionary: 1 : the quantity baked at one time : baking 2 a : the quantity of material prepared or required for one operation; specifically : a mixture of raw materials ready for fusion into glass b : the quantity produced at one operation c : a group of jobs (as programs) that are submitted for processing on a computer and whose results are obtained at a later time batch processing compare time-sharing 3 : a quantity (as of persons or things) considered as a group Thesaurus: Meaning: 1 a number of things considered as a unit a batch of essays to correct see group 1 2 a usually small number of persons considered as a unit send in the next batch of applicants see group 2 Subject and Verb Agreement Basic Rule. The basic rule states that a singular subject takes a singular verb, while a plural subject takes a plural verb. http://www.grammarbook.com/grammar/subjectVerbAgree.asp |
#3
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This is not a forum for discussing English grammar, but ...
Remarkably, Word's "grammar checker" got it right this time. The subject of the verb is not "letters," but "A batch of letters," and "a batch" is singular. All that matters in grammar is the _form_ of the noun, not the _meaning_ of the noun. "Batch" is uncommon compared to "group" and "number," so it hasn't turned into an idiomatic expression that sometimes can be plural in this construction. You'll find plenty of examples of singular verbs after "a group of" and "a number of." On Dec 1, 11:08*pm, Ashley wrote: The phrase "a batch of" can be followed by countable and uncountable nouns but why in Word it must be followed by singular verb even through the subject is plural? Can anyone help me in explaining this? By grammar of Subject and Verb Agreement and Principle of Proximity: A batch of letters are ready. (Should be correct) The reason is that the subject "A batch of letters" actually is plural and should be followed by a verb in plural form. I have also tried a number of and a group of and they are OK. A number of STBs are ready. (Correct in Word) A group of STBs are ready. (Correct in Word) I have checked in dictionary and grammar book:http://www.merriam-webster.com/dicti...hesaurus/batch Dictionary: * 1 : the quantity baked at one time : baking 2 a : the quantity of material prepared or required for one operation; specifically : a mixture of raw materials ready for fusion into glass b : the quantity produced at one operation c : a group of jobs (as programs) that are submitted for processing on a computer and whose results are obtained at a later time batch processing compare time-sharing 3 : a quantity (as of persons or things) considered as a group Thesaurus: Meaning: 1 a number of things considered as a unit a batch of essays to correct see group 1 2 a usually small number of persons considered as a unit send in the next batch of applicants see group 2 Subject and Verb Agreement Basic Rule. The basic rule states that a singular subject takes a singular verb, while a plural subject takes a plural verb. http://www.grammarbook.com/grammar/s...VerbAgree.asp* |
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